"The amount of government spending on health care is really low. It's less than $10 per person, per year," said Drew Thompson, director of China studies and Starr senior fellow at the Nixon Center.

Per person expenditures in the U.S. have topped $6,000 in recent years.

Despite China's Communist government, health care remains largely the responsibility of individuals. Out-of-pocket expenses are extremely high in comparison to average earnings. A single hospital visit nearly matches China's annual income per capita.

Health Insurance Not Mandated

Health insurance is not mandated, though the government does have health insurance programs that provide coverage to some 90 percent of the population. The programs include an employer-based system, a program for urban residents, and another program covering the rural population. For the most part, the programs do not cover the basic care.

"At the moment, most programs in the provinces across China provide primarily in-patient care service," said Dr. Gordon Liu, professor of economics at Peking University. "Basically, the goal is to protect you from having catastrophic problems."

As a result, much of the Chinese population doesn't even receive basic medical care.

"They're still paying largely out of pocket, which causes them to delay going to the doctor," Thompson said. "People don't go to the hospital until they're really sick. There's no preventative services."

But even with the financial disincentive, there still is a shortage of care.

"Usually, Chinese people would have to wait many days to get registered, or you have to know someone ... to get registered before you are diagnosed and treated," said Liu. "We have a supply shortage ... meaning beds, the doctors, good hospital facilities are not enough to meet the demand by people."

Health Care in China: Doctors Rarely Have PhD

Though quality medicine is available for China's wealthiest people, most residents receive treatment from physicians who have received little medical training. Just one percent of Chinese doctors have actually received a PhD, while many have only basic training, similar to pre-med classes in the U.S.

"The quality of education, experience and technology, by and large, is not up to world standards," Thompson said.

Part of the reason for the shortage of well-trained doctors is that there's little financial incentive for China's best and brightest to go into the field. While much of China's economy has become market-based in recent years, medicine has not made the same transition and doctors' salaries are tightly controlled by the state.